Description of the CZO Program

Critical Zone Observatories (CZOs) are natural watershed laboratories for investigating Earth surface processes mediated by fresh water. Research at the CZO scale seeks to understand these little-known coupled processes through monitoring of streams, climate/weather and groundwater. CZOs are instrumented for hydrogeochemical measurements and are sampled for soil, canopy and bedrock materials. CZOs involve teams of cross-disciplinary scientists whose research is motivated and implemented by both field and theoretical approaches, and include substantial education and outreach.

Image Requests

NonCommercial only - With the exception of CZO graphics and logos, images on criticalzone.org are available for non-commercial use (including educational use). Using an image does not convey CZO’s endorsement.

Attribution required- You must give appropriate attribution to the source of the image. If you make substantial changes to the image, they should be noted too.

For example, this Critical Zone illustration has been substantially changed. The full attribution is "Modified from Chorover, J., R. Kretzschmar, F. Garcia-Pichel, and D. L. Sparks. 2007. Soil biogeochemical processes in the critical zone. Elements 3, 321-326. (artwork by R. Kindlimann) ." If space is limited, then use a short attribution of "After Chorover et al, 2007. Catalina-Jemez CZO." If attribution style requires credit to the illustrator, use "Based on an image by Ralph Kindlimann. Courtesy of Jon Chorover and colleagues, Catalina-Jemez Critical Zone Observatory". Download high-resolution version (new browser tab).

If you cannot find attribution information or are inquiring about a higher resolution version of an image, please contact the Observatory that is using the image. See the "Contact" link in the upper right or lower left of the page on which the image appears.

Privacy - If the image includes an identifiable person in a situation that may infringe that person's right to privacy or publicity, then permission should be obtained from that person in writing. For information about how to correspond with the person in question, get in touch with the Observatory that is using the image. See the "Contact" link in the upper right or lower left of the page on which the image appears.